0% found this document useful (0 votes)
5 views

201 ch3

Uploaded by

Champion Allyson
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
5 views

201 ch3

Uploaded by

Champion Allyson
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 9

Chapter 3

Chapter Three Overview


 Consumer Preferences and the Concept of Utility
 The Utility Function
Marginal Utility and Diminishing Marginal Utility
 Indifference Curves
 The Marginal Rate of Substitution
 Some Special Functional Forms

Why study consumer choice?


 Study of how consumers with limited resources choose goods and
services
 Helps derive the demand curve for any good or service
 Businesses care about consumer demand curves
 Government can use this to determine how to help and whom to help
buy certain goods and services

Model of Consumer Behavior

• Premises of the model:


1. Individual tastes or preferences determine the amount of pleasure people
derive from the goods and services they consume.
2. Consumers face constraints, or limits, on their choices.
3. Consumers maximize their well-being or pleasure from consumption
subject to the budget and other constraints they face.

Preferences

Consumer Preferences tell us how the consumer would rank (that is,
compare the desirability of) any two combinations or allotments of goods,
assuming these allotments were available to the consumer at no cost.

These allotments of goods are referred to as baskets or bundles. These


baskets are assumed to be available for consumption at a particular time,
place and under particular physical circumstances.

1
Chapter 3

Assumptions

1. Completeness
Preferences are complete if the consumer can rank any two baskets of goods
(A preferred to B (written A B) ; B preferred to A(written A B); or
indifferent between A and B(written A B).

2. Transitivity
Preferences are transitive if a consumer who prefers basket A to basket B,
and basket B to basket C also prefers basket A to basket C

3. Monotonicity
Preferences are monotonic if a basket with more of at least one good and no
less of any good is preferred to the original basket.
In this regard, a “good” is different than a “bad.”

Indifference Curves. An indifference curve represents all combinations of


market baskets that provide the consumer with the same level of
satisfaction.

2
Chapter 3

Five important properties of indifference curves:

 There is an indifference curve through every possible bundle.

 Indifference curves slope downward.

 Indifference curves cannot cross.

 Indifference curves cannot be thick.

3
Chapter 3

 Bundles of goods on indifference curves further from the origin are


preferred to those on indifference curves closer to the origin.

The Shape of Indifference Curves


We know ICs are downward sloping (since more is better).

Another Assumption:
4. Convexity ICs are usually convex (bowed inward) reflecting that MRS
diminishes as the amount of X increases along an IC.

4
Chapter 3

Utility
• Utility refers to a set of numerical values that reflect the relative
rankings of various bundles of goods.
• A utility function is simply a way of assigning a preference ordering
consumption bundles. It does this by assigning numbers to consumption
bundles so that the bundles that are more preferred get a higher number than
those bundles that are less preferred.

EX: Given a specific utility function, U = q11/2q21/2


Say, bundle a contains 16 q1and 9 q2: then U(a) =
and bundle b contains 13 q1 and 13 q2 : then U(b) =

Thus, b a

• Utility is an ordinal measure rather than a cardinal one.


• Utility tells us the relative ranking of two things but not how
much more one rank is valued than another.
• We don’t really care that U(a) = 12 and U(b) = 13 in the
previous example; we care that b a.
• A utility function representing a preference ordering is not
unique. The only requirement for a particular assignment of
numbers to be classified as ‘a utility function representing a
preference ordering’ is that it must retain the rank order of
consumption bundles in terms of the preference of the
consumer. Thus, any other assignment of numbers that keeps
the ranking of bundles intact will also be a utility
representation.

For example: both the columns in the table below represent the same
preference ordering over bundles B1 B2 and B3

5
Chapter 3

If we have a utility function representing a preference ordering, we can


derive an infinite number of utility functions representing the same
preference ordering.
In general, we can form a new function V(X, Y) from U(X,Y)by feeding the
utility numbers into another function, f.
V(X, Y) = f(U(X,Y))
If f has the property that the larger the numbers that we feed, the larger the
numbers that come out, then V(X,Y) is also a utility function that represents
those preferences.

Marginal Utility

More is better implies

Marginal Utility and Marginal Rate of Substitution (MRS)

Curvature of Indifference Curves


• Different utility functions generate different indifference curves:
• The shape of the IC describes the willingness to substitute one good
for the other

6
Chapter 3

Perfect substitutes: Anna likes pop, but is indifferent whether it is coke or


pepsi

Perfect complements: consumer consumes the goods in fixed proportions


left shoe, right shoe or pie and ice cream . Anna doesn’t like ice cream by
itself or pie by itself, but loves apple pie a la mode (one slice of pie with one
scoop of ice cream)

7
Chapter 3

• Imperfect Substitutes
Between extreme examples of perfect substitutes and perfect complements
are standard-shaped, convex indifference curves (

• Cobb-Douglas utility function

U = Axy
Where A, , positive constants

8
Chapter 3

• Quasilinear utility function

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy